
17-10-2025
The Radar: Sudan Between Collapse and Dismantling - A Reading of the Current Scene
By Professor/Ihab Al-Nakhli
Amid escalating successive crises in Sudan; from the collapse of the health infrastructure to the exacerbation of armed conflicts, a darker scene looms on the horizon, its features drawn in the chambers of international politics and its tools implemented locally. But the truth is that what is happening is a systematic implementation of a colonial plan aimed at dismantling Sudan, plundering its wealth, and distancing it from the political Islam project, within the framework of reshaping the region in a way that serves the interests of Western powers.
The health collapse is not merely a result of neglect, but rather a deliberate policy to weaken the ability of the people of Sudan to resist. Hospitals are bombed, aid is politicized, and epidemics are left to spread and kill millions, in the absence of any independent plan or vision. The Renaissance Dam crisis is managed in a way that ensures Sudan remains hostage to Jewish interests under direct American supervision, without regard for the country's sovereignty or water security. As for the internal wars, they are fueled with weapons and funding, and managed through local agents, with the aim of exhausting the army and dismantling the social fabric, thus opening the door for international intervention under humanitarian pretexts.
Sudan today is not run from a sovereign center, but from conflicting centers of influence: the army, the Rapid Support Forces, the armed movements, all of which receive external support. This multiplicity is not random, but rather part of a plan of "organized chaos" that is used to justify international intervention later, under the slogan of "protecting civilians" or "rebuilding the state," while the real goal is to reshape Sudan in line with the interests of the new colonialism.
The Omar al-Bashir regime, despite its Islamic slogans, was part of the international system, where American sanctions were a heavy stick, then sought to normalize relations with the West and the Jewish entity. He left behind a weakened state, full of armed movements, and security breaches, which made it easier for the colonial powers to re-engineer the political scene after his fall. One of his most prominent tools that he founded was the Rapid Support Forces, which emerged as a force parallel to the army, then turned into an independent player in the conflict, which opened the door for the militarization of society and the fragmentation of the military establishment.
Al-Burhan followed the same approach, but deepened it, by arming new militias under names such as "Popular Resistance" and "Special Action Battalions," and also supported the formation of "Shield of the Island" forces led by Abu Aqila Kikel, which are fighting alongside the army in the state of Al-Jazeera and others. Reports revealed that Al-Burhan distributed weapons to civilians randomly, and announced this explicitly in documented statements, which led to bloody clashes in the villages of Al-Jazeera, and opened the door to a widespread civil war. These policies do not differ in essence from the policies of the previous regime, but rather implement the same colonial plan, with a difference in tools and faces.
Sudan is heading towards a systematic dismantling, managed by America, and implemented by local tools. Wealth is plundered through dubious agreements with foreign companies, and privileges are granted that the people of the country do not obtain. Therefore, the radical solution from the Sharia perspective does not lie in patching up the regime or replacing faces with other faces, but rather in uprooting the colonial system from its roots, through the establishment of the righteous Caliphate that unites Muslims and cuts off the hand of colonialism from their countries, canceling international agreements that perpetuate dependency and plunder wealth, rebuilding the army on the doctrine of Islam, not on the doctrine of loyalty to the West, liberating political decision-making from international hegemony, and restoring sovereignty to Sharia, not to the land or the people, according to the provisions of Islam.
The Sudanese scene is not just an internal crisis, but rather a link in a global colonial project targeting the Islamic nation. The duty of the nation, as Sharia sees it, is to thwart this project, and rebuild Sudan as part of the comprehensive Islamic state, not as a fragmented entity subordinate to the West.
Source: Al Radar
